Oil firms braced for court battles

POLAR BEARS LISTEDUS Interior Department has listed polar bears as a threatened species and oil and gas firms are concerned they will now face court battles in Alaska

AP , JUNEAU, ALASKA

A policeman speaks to activists of the Alaska Wilderness League dressed as polar bears as US Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne announces the listing of the polar bear as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act at the Interior Department in Washington on Wednesday. The Interior Department said the loss of sea ice puts polar bears at risk of being endangered in the foreseeable future.

PHOTO: AFP

The oil industry is bracing for some courtroom battles to maintain its stake in Alaska’s oil-rich fields now that the US Interior Department has listed polar bears as a threatened species.

About 15 percent of oil in the US is being produced in Alaska and soaring prices for the commodity are pushing companies to look farther and farther offshore to the floors of the Beaufort and Chukchi seas, which are frozen much of the year.

At a news conference on Wednesday to announce the listing, US Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne was armed with slides and charts showing the dramatic decline in sea ice over the last 30 years and projections that the melting of ice — a key habitat for the bear — would continue and may even quicken. He said that means the polar bear is a species likely to be in danger of extinction in the near future.

Major oil companies like ConocoPhillips, BP PLC, Exxon Mobil Corp and Royal Dutch Shell PLC stand to lose the most — they either have huge stakes in current North Slope production or have their eye on future exploration.

Marilyn Crockett, executive director of the Alaska Oil and Gas Association, said she is concerned Wednesday’s decision will drive prolonged court battles over future oil exploration and production.

The association represents 17 oil and gas companies and the owners of a trans-Alaskan pipeline.

“We now have a species threatened which is both healthy in size and population. The real risk is litigation that will follow,” Crockett said. “Lawsuits will continue to be filed opposing individual operations, lease sales and permits, and that could have a significant impact on business up here.”

Crockett said that there were no immediate plans to go on the courtroom offensive.

“We are going through all of the documentation to learn what the basis is for the decision,” Crockett said. “Then we’ll have a discussion of whether there is any action to take. We don’t see any targets painted on projects yet, but it’s likely we’ll end up in court. In the end, significant energy policies will be decided by the courts.”

The Interior Department outlined a set of administrative actions and limits to how it planned to protect the polar bear with its new status so that it would not have wide-ranging adverse impact on economic activities from building power plants to oil and gas exploration.

Kempthorne said the oil industry operates under the rules of the Marine Mammal Protection Act and that an Endangered Species Act provision will allow oil and gas activities to continue under the act’s stricter standards.

“This rule, effective immediately, will ensure the protection of the bear while allowing us to continue to develop our natural resources in the arctic region in an environmentally sound way,” the Interior Department said in its announcement.

The ruling comes at a time when the oil industry has its eye on resource-rich offshore fields.